After the near-death experience, Trey sat on the beach and wrote the music to "Harry Hood".
"Harry Hood" is famous among the band's fans for its association with the spontaneous emergence of "glowstick wars," a Phish-created audience and band interaction in which multicolored glowsticks were tossed from all points in the crowd, such as during the 1997 "Great Went" performance featured in the film Bittersweet Motel.
"Harry Hood" was performed at Phish's supposed "farewell" Coventry two-day gig in 2004 on the rocks in the front of the stage.
The rocks were placed in an effort to help control the massive flooding that turned the Coventry event into a muddy mess.
"Harry Hood" made its first album appearance on the 1995 release A Live One, which includes a performance from an October 1994 concert in Gainesville, Florida.